Publisher's Description
A Japanese power plant, dilapidated slums, the patterned facades of an apartment
complex in Paris—in the work of German art photographer Andreas
Gursky, born in 1955 in Leipzig, both private dwellings and the domains of
industrial and political power are made into sometimes awe-inspiring and
always overpowering forces of urban life. Gursky’s signature mix of epic sweep
and extreme detail is ideally suited to the portrayal of large-scale architecture,
eliciting its most salient features: The capacity to dwarf, to impress, to alienate
and to daunt. Where many of us will habitually blank out architectural environments
which cannot be accommodated by the naked eye, Gursky’s approach is
to photograph them in order to render them comprehensible:“My preference
for clear structures is the result of my desire, perhaps illusory, to keep track of
things and maintain my grip on the world.” Architecture is a collection of
breathtaking images by the world-famous photographer, taken between 1988
and the present day, and treating all aspects of architectural structure, from
the inside out. Each of the 75 color photographs is accompanied by commentary
by renowned German authors Aleida Assmann, Jan Assmann, Elisabeth
Bronfen, Sonja Fessel, Paul Nizon, Alfred Nordmann, Mirjam Schaub, Rudolf
Schmitz, Monika Schmitz-Emans, Peter Schneemann and Thomas Zaunschirm.
The resulting conjunction of text and image attractively demonstrates the
depth and breadth of Gursky’s concept of architecture.
Book Information
ISBN:
3775721770
Publisher:
Hatje Cantz
Format:
Hardcover, 112 pages
Language:
English
Dimensions:
9٫7 x
11٫8 x
0 inches